ReonBalisty wrote: » Who does 5 years Help desk without pursuing more responsibility in another IT job?
kiki162 wrote: » Lack of experience and education is your issue. As much as you want to talk about your freelancing work, it really doesn't matter until you have the education to back it up.
techfiend wrote: » Do you have WGU on your resume? Do you bring up your near future education goals in interviews? Those were key for me getting into the field. I had 3 job offers within a month; full-time enterprise second shift help desk, full time SMB first shift help desk, SMB part time days desktop support.
techfiend wrote: » Are you getting a good % of positive responses after applying? If not, you may want to focus on your resume. If you want a critique by managers and others that have been in the same situation feel free to post it here after removing personal information. It really helped me get more interviews.
ReonBalisty wrote: » ...they were only concerned about my lack of enterprise level experience. In which I was forth coming that I could learn quickly and pick up what was needed to be done quite simply. I explained I spent 16 years doing freelance technology consulting/break fix issues.
ReonBalisty wrote: » Am I missing something? I was told that I didn't get this job because the person they brought on had 5 years experience doing Help Desk. (Who does 5 years Help desk without pursuing more responsibility in another IT job?)
ReonBalisty wrote: » For the most part the staffing agency representative is telling me that the only thing I have not going for me is the lack of Experience. So my AA-IT and my A+/Net+ certs mean pretty much nothing with all that effort I put into getting them?
sillymcnasty wrote: » I personally would be weirded out if someone with 16 years IT experience came to me for a help desk job that isn't just a 2nd job for more money. So I'm +1 on the drop the 16 year bit.
NetworkNewb wrote: » He is getting interviews. Why do people think it is his resume that is the problem? Or even his education or experience? The managers know what kind of experience and education he has going into the interview. They aren't going to waste their time if they didn't want to hear what he had to say. Work on the interview skills like I said before...
cbdudek wrote: » As someone who has done hiring in IT, here are some things I am noticing about your resume. First, you do have a lot of experience listed. If you are applying for helpdesk jobs, that can be something that would work against you. I would drop the freelancing bit as well and just focus on your overall experience in a business environment. Second, for your current WGU education, you may want to put down "expected graduation" and a date or month/year instead of "currently attending". It would show employers that you have a goal and are looking to achieve it by a certain time period. You may want to include a link to your linkedin profile into your resume instead of stating that you can find more skills on your linkedin account.
UncleB wrote: » A lot of people find Help Desk work easy enough, satisfying enough and well paid enough to not need to move on - emphasis on "enough" as they don't all need to climb mountains technically in their career and like the regular hours, predictable tasks and variable workload. It is great for some people with interests outside of work (family, hobbies etc) as it doesn't require self study, on call etc so they can have a predicatable quality of life. These people don't tend to move on much so you can find they are blocking positions you may be hoping to get. There is also the people who aren't good enough to move on so they settle for this being as good as they can get. So long as they don't mess up badly they can endure in these positions for decades and be pretty useful.
techfiend wrote: » I was in a similar position thinking I could get an entry level position based on my experience with old technologies, I had netware on my resume at one point...
volfkhat wrote: » i still do! lol But mainly just for bragging rights :]